I have an app.js node application. As this file is starting to grow, I would like to move some part of the code in some other files that I would "require" or "include" in the app.js file.
I'm trying things like:
// Declare application
var app = require('express').createServer();
// Declare usefull stuff for DB purposes
var mongoose = require('mongoose');
var Schema = mongoose.Schema;
var ObjectId = Schema.ObjectId;
// THE FOLLOWING REQUIRE DOES NOT WORK
require('./models/car.js');
in car.js:
// Define Car model
CarSchema = new Schema({
brand : String,
type : String
});
mongoose.model('Car', CarSchema);
I got the error:
开发者_JAVA技巧ReferenceError: Schema is not defined
I'm just looking to have the content of car.js loaded (instead of having everything in the same app.js file) Is there a particuliar way to do this in node.js ?
To place an emphasis on what everyone else has been saying var foo
in top level does not create a global variable. If you want a global variable then write global.foo
. but we all know globals are evil.
If you are someone who uses globals like that in a node.js project I was on I would refactor them away for as there are just so few use cases for this (There are a few exceptions but this isn't one).
// Declare application
var app = require('express').createServer();
// Declare usefull stuff for DB purposes
var mongoose = require('mongoose');
var Schema = mongoose.Schema;
var ObjectId = Schema.ObjectId;
require('./models/car.js').make(Schema, mongoose);
in car.js
function make(Schema, mongoose) {
// Define Car model
CarSchema = new Schema({
brand : String,
type : String
});
mongoose.model('Car', CarSchema);
}
module.exports.make = make;
The correct answer is usually to use require, but in a few cases it's not possible.
The following code will do the trick, but use it with care:
var fs = require('fs');
var vm = require('vm');
var includeInThisContext = function(path) {
var code = fs.readFileSync(path);
vm.runInThisContext(code, path);
}.bind(this);
includeInThisContext(__dirname+"/models/car.js");
Short answer:
// lib.js
module.exports.your_function = function () {
// Something...
};
// app.js
require('./lib.js').your_function();
you can put
var mongoose = require('mongoose');
var Schema = mongoose.Schema;
at the top of your car.js file for it to work, or you can do what Raynos said to do.
If you just want to test a library from the command line, you could do:
cat somelibrary.js mytestfile.js | node
This approach works for me in Node.js, Is there any problem with this one?
File 'include.js':
fs = require('fs');
File 'main.js':
require('./include.js');
fs.readFile('./file.json', function (err, data) {
if (err) {
console.log('ERROR: file.json not found...')
} else {
contents = JSON.parse(data)
};
})
精彩评论